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It is: width times length times height measured in cubic units
The volume of any object is measured in cubic units of length - whatever the shape of the object. The only thing that might change are the units of length themselves: if you are imperial minded, then the volume of a model pyramid would be measured in cubic inches, that of the Egyptian or Central/South American ones would be in cubic yards. If you are SI minded, then you will prefer cubic centimetres or cubic metres.
Cubic meters, cubic centimeters, cubic kilometers, etc., depending on how big the object is that you want to measure.
A solid is a 3 dimensional object having length, width and height. Its volume measured in cubic units is length*width*height
Volume is measured in cubic units.
Volume of all matter is measured in cubic centimeters. Mass is measured in grams. The property of matter that is measured in cubic centimetres is volume. It is a measurement of the amount of space a substance occupies.
an everyday object that has the volume of a cubic metre is a sphere
Volume is length*width*height in cubic units. If this is not possible then when an object is immersed in water the water displaced is equal to the volume of the object which was discovered by Archimedes.
It is: width times length times height measured in cubic units
Its the volume
A rectangle is a 2-dimensional object and cannot have a volume. A [rectangular] cuboid, of dimensions 8*12*24 has a volume = 2304 cubic units.
The volume of any object is measured in cubic units of length - whatever the shape of the object. The only thing that might change are the units of length themselves: if you are imperial minded, then the volume of a model pyramid would be measured in cubic inches, that of the Egyptian or Central/South American ones would be in cubic yards. If you are SI minded, then you will prefer cubic centimetres or cubic metres.
A rectangle is a shape on a flat surface. It has two dimensions,and its volume is zero.BTW -- Any unit of volume is a 'cubic unit'.
Cubic meters, cubic centimeters, cubic kilometers, etc., depending on how big the object is that you want to measure.
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To distinguish it from the volume of an object which is measured in cubic units.
Volume is measured in cubic units